T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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126.2 | I prefer to get to "know" someone first.. | REGENT::MOZER | HCC ;-) | Wed Oct 29 1986 13:49 | 49 |
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Steve, while I understand what you are saying about feeling that
it is taking a risk to "any existing relationships ... however strong
or shakey they may be" to date some other, I think that relates
somewhat to that other NOTE in here on "the green-eyed monster"
and, especially in the case of a casual or just beginning relationship,
I don't feel possibilities of other "dates" are a risk, rather I
feel they are more like my preventing myself from "putting all (my)
eggs in one basket" (to use a popular cliche) to explore other options
until the present one either develops into a more serious one (which
still does not necessarily preclude "other dates" if that's what
both agree to), or doesn't work out, which then doesn't leave me
starting again from "ground zero". However, I feel this is digressing
somewhat from the original entry in this note.
Bob, I can relate very well to what you are saying about the different
situations that can/do lead to that "first date" with someone.
In my case, I find that it is easier for me to ask a lady for that
"first date" after I have gotten to know her somewhat via whatever
means. Some ladies I have asked out I have gotten to know via the
singles clubs I belong to either from getting to know something
about them at one or more of that clubs' discussion groups or other
activities, or at singles dances, where an interest in dancing is
the initial common interest you drew a parallel to in hiking. Seeing
them at several dances, talking and dancing, we get to know something
about each other and if I feel there are enough commonalities, I
do ask them for a "date" and usually find that they also feel we
have several things in common and readily accept the "date". I
also find NOTES and the other means we have as DECcies also lets
me get to know something about someone (and them me) so that some
common grounds provide the interest and basis for getting to know
each other more by going out on a date to the type of places that
provide the opportunity to talk and have fun at the same time
(that's in a different NOTE in this conference, I know).
In terms of your questions about responding, I make it a point to
ALWAYS respond to a lady who puts effort into getting to meet me.
I do this in whatever way is appropriate - if I get MAIL from someone,
I make a point of answering it. If I am at a dance and a lady asks
me to dance, I will accept the invitation. When the reverse situation
exists (they don't respond to me), I will usually make a second
attempt (allowing for something other than "me" preventing a response)
but if that second try doesn't get a response, then I usually feel
that they are not interested and I direct my efforts elsewhere.
You initiated a very good topic, Bob. I will find other RELPLYs
to it interesting, I am sure...
Joe
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126.4 | | REGENT::KIMBROUGH | gailann, maynard, ma... | Wed Oct 29 1986 15:20 | 13 |
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I think women are often just as likely to be playing the field or
dating more than one person at a time, just that they tend to be
a little more discreet about it..
Eagle.. I think gals often use a shot gun too.. just one with a
silencer on it that is all!!! ;-)
later, gailann
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126.6 | Keep asking | QUARK::LIONEL | Reality is frequently inaccurate | Wed Oct 29 1986 17:10 | 16 |
| Earlier this summer, I got up the nerve to ask a female co-worker
for a lunch date, figuring that that was the least threatening form
of a "date". She turned me down, but because she had a steady
boyfriend which of course I didn't know. She did it politely, and
I didn't hesitate in continuing to ask women for dates. Eventually
I found someone who said yes!
So my advice is to go ahead and ask - but pick a situation that
is not threatening to the one you ask. A lunch date, a movie, play,
etc. are all safe. An expensive night on the town is not. If you
get turned down gently, then just move on. If the turn down is
not gentle, then you're better off anyway!
What burns me though is what you go through to get a SECOND date,
and I think I'll bring that up in another topic.
Steve
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126.7 | Relax, then it's easy | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Oct 29 1986 19:02 | 11 |
| The whole process isn't intrinsicly hard; any difficulty comes
from one's fear of the unknown or of rejection.
Once I had learnt how to ask girls out (the first time was very
uncomfortable), I had no problem--I remember one evening when I
was in college when I asked ten women out in a row and got
rejected by all ten of them. There was a important lesson there
for me: it's not serious--you're just out for a date for an evening,
it's not your whole life on the line!
-John Bishop
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126.9 | No guts, No glory... | ANYWAY::GORDON | Random Emotion Generator | Thu Oct 30 1986 08:21 | 28 |
| Suzanne & all:
I doubt person you might be interested in is ever going
to start wearing a sign that says "I'm open for invitations from
any of the following people:..."
I was turned down recently for a dinner invitation (already
involved) from someone I met casually at a party and decided to
take a chance. Being turned down is never pleasant, but I'm not
going to slash my wrists over it either.
In high school, I had a crush on a girl in my class. I wasn't
anywhere near as dashing and confident in those days as I am now
[ 8-| {Wide-eyed straight face!} ] and I got rejected time after time.
(It wasn't just me... she didn't date in high school and barely in
college.) When I was home recently, my mother suggested I call her. I
don't think I'm up to that yet...
I have no objection to spending a few bucks and a couple of
hours of my time to meet a new person. My first "dates" in the
last three months have been $20 - $60 and 2 - 5(?) hrs. Usually
dinner & drinks.
The alternative is waiting for someone to come to you... and
if you're male, it doesn't happen very often...
--D
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126.10 | Dating is a Sales job | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Oct 30 1986 10:44 | 12 |
| In sales, job interviews, research and such sequential endeavors,
all you need is one "Yes". The customers who left, the job offers
not given, the failed experiments--they're just the "No"s you collect
along the way.
Or so a salesman-type once told me. I don't like the idea enough
to ever want to be in sales, but I see the application: you should
not invest a lot of emotional energy into preparing to ask someone
out, nor should you wait a long time before doing so. Then a "No"
won't bother you, and a "Yes" won't lead to premature pressure for
a "relationship".
-John Bishop
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126.11 | Useful advice from another subject | OMEGA::KINZELMAN | Paul Kinzelman | Thu Oct 30 1986 10:56 | 3 |
| From the "What Color is your Parachute" book (I can't find the exact
quote): You will get a "yes" after a certain number of "no"s. After
each "no" you are one more closer to the eventual "yes".
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126.13 | fools rush in... | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis the Menace | Thu Oct 30 1986 15:15 | 20 |
|
Having gone to an all-boy high school and then enlisted in the Navy,
I was in my early twenties before I started "dating". Some of my
earliest attempts were quite hilarious, but the good news is that
I hadn't developed any bad habits. Returning to the Boston area
I became active in some of the local folk dance groups. One night
at a Christmas party, a girl with whom I'd danced occasionaly but
did not know, was talking 'round the punchbowl about going to the
Handel's Messiah sing in Lexington. Being attracted to her, I allowed
as how I would be very interested in going to that and we made plans
to get together. When the scheduled event came, a blizzard shut
down the public transportation and since we couldn't go together
on my bicycle we spent the evening at her apartment and I ended
on the couch for the night. This was the beginning of a long and
close relationship but it wasn't until several months later that
she discovered that not only had I never sung the Messiah, but I
couldn't even read music.
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126.15 | my first two cents. | ARGUS::COOK | Dreadful Mourning | Tue Nov 04 1986 06:11 | 20 |
|
First dates are something I haven't really worried about in quite
a while but also something I have worried about in the past. My
stance is that finding someone that is askable usually happens when
you least expect it. So does being asked. I have never gone though
alot of trouble trying to get that first date becuase basicly I
don't have alot of free time and also I am quite a layed back person.
If I'm going to ask someone for a first date, I want to know them
a little first but that isn't a hard lined requirement.
Before I ask I usually wait until I have a good idea that I'll
get a Yes. Getting that idea is not hard either. I don't like No's
but like someone else said, it's one step closer to a Yes.
I find that going out to a quiet place for a couple of drinks
for the first date is usually the best way to meet and get to
relatively know someone. Where you go on the first has an indirect
effect on getting a second.
PC
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126.16 | Quickness counts | NYMGR::MCCREADY | Gary, Rabid New Yorker | Thu Nov 27 1986 01:39 | 13 |
| Some delayed small change...
I find that after a positive first encounter, chances of getting that first
date increase if you suggest it to be as soon as possible, and for
maybe something not-so-complex, or threatening (like lunch, or drinks
after work). Of course, you may not be able to haul out all the
works to impress the other person in a short period of time, but
at least you have the foot in the door.
If you have to wait to rearrange schedules, etc, you start wondering
if all the scheduling overhead is worth it...
--Gary
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